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Dilatory and Downward Development of 3-m Scale Irregularities in the Funnel-Like Region of a Rapidly Rising Equatorial Plasma Bubble 期刊论文
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2020, 47 (13)
作者:  Ram, S. Tulasi;  Ajith, K. K.;  Yokoyama, T.;  Yamamoto, M.;  Hozumi, K.;  Shiokawa, K.;  Otsuka, Y.;  Li, G.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:13/0  |  提交时间:2020/06/16
equatorial plasma bubble  ionospheric scintillation  electric fields and model simulations  
WHY POLLUTION IS FALLING IN SOME CITIES - BUT NOT OTHERS 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 580 (7803) : 313-313
作者:  Sulkowski, Parker L.;  Oeck, Sebastian;  Dow, Jonathan;  Economos, Nicholas G.;  Mirfakhraie, Lily;  Liu, Yanfeng;  Noronha, Katelyn;  Bao, Xun;  Li, Jing;  Shuch, Brian M.;  King, Megan C.;  Bindra, Ranjit S.;  Glazer, Peter M.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:14/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03
Chesapeake Bay acidification buffered by spatially decoupled carbonate mineral cycling 期刊论文
NATURE GEOSCIENCE, 2020, 13 (6) : 441-+
作者:  Su, Jianzhong;  Cai, Wei-Jun;  Brodeur, Jean;  Chen, Baoshan;  Hussain, Najid;  Yao, Yichen;  Ni, Chaoying;  Testa, Jeremy M.;  Li, Ming;  Xie, Xiaohui;  Ni, Wenfei;  Scaboo, K. Michael;  Xu, Yuan-yuan;  Cornwell, Jeffrey;  Gurbisz, Cassie;  Owens, Michael S.;  Waldbusser, George G.;  Dai, Minhan;  Kemp, W. Michael
收藏  |  浏览/下载:9/0  |  提交时间:2020/06/09
Late Miocene Climate Cooling Contributed to the Disappearance of Hominoids in Yunnan Region, Southwestern China 期刊论文
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2020, 47 (11)
作者:  Li, Pei;  Zhang, Chunxia;  Kelley, Jay;  Deng, Chenglong;  Ji, Xueping;  Jablonski, Nina G.;  Wu, Haibin;  Fu, Yang;  Guo, Zhengtang;  Zhu, Rixiang
收藏  |  浏览/下载:6/0  |  提交时间:2020/05/20
late Miocene  climate change  hominoids  Yunnan  chemical weathering  
Impaired cell fate through gain-of-function mutations in a chromatin reader 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 577 (7788) : 121-+
作者:  Wan, Liling;  Chong, Shasha;  Xuan, Fan;  Liang, Angela;  Cui, Xiaodong;  Gates, Leah;  Carroll, Thomas S.;  Li, Yuanyuan;  Feng, Lijuan;  Chen, Guochao;  Wang, Shu-Ping;  Ortiz, Michael V.;  Daley, Sara K.;  Wang, Xiaolu;  Xuan, Hongwen;  Kentsis, Alex;  Muir, Tom W.;  Roeder, Robert G.;  Li, Haitao;  Li, Wei;  Tjian, Robert;  Wen, Hong;  Allis, C. David
收藏  |  浏览/下载:11/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Modifications of histone proteins have essential roles in normal development and human disease. Recognition of modified histones by '  reader'  proteins is a key mechanism that mediates the function of histone modifications, but how the dysregulation of these readers might contribute to disease remains poorly understood. We previously identified the ENL protein as a reader of histone acetylation via its YEATS domain, linking it to the expression of cancer-driving genes in acute leukaemia1. Recurrent hotspot mutations have been found in the ENL YEATS domain in Wilms tumour2,3, the most common type of paediatric kidney cancer. Here we show, using human and mouse cells, that these mutations impair cell-fate regulation by conferring gain-of-function in chromatin recruitment and transcriptional control. ENL mutants induce gene-expression changes that favour a premalignant cell fate, and, in an assay for nephrogenesis using murine cells, result in undifferentiated structures resembling those observed in human Wilms tumour. Mechanistically, although bound to largely similar genomic loci as the wild-type protein, ENL mutants exhibit increased occupancy at a subset of targets, leading to a marked increase in the recruitment and activity of transcription elongation machinery that enforces active transcription from target loci. Furthermore, ectopically expressed ENL mutants exhibit greater self-association and form discrete and dynamic nuclear puncta that are characteristic of biomolecular hubs consisting of local high concentrations of regulatory factors. Such mutation-driven ENL self-association is functionally linked to enhanced chromatin occupancy and gene activation. Collectively, our findings show that hotspot mutations in a chromatinreader domain drive self-reinforced recruitment, derailing normal cell-fate control during development and leading to an oncogenic outcome.


  
Monumental architecture at Aguada Fenix and the rise of Maya civilization 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020
作者:  Bedding, Timothy R.;  Murphy, Simon J.;  Hey, Daniel R.;  Huber, Daniel;  Li, Tanda;  Smalley, Barry;  Stello, Dennis;  White, Timothy R.;  Ball, Warrick H.;  Chaplin, William J.;  Colman, Isabel L.;  Fuller, Jim;  Gaidos, Eric;  Harbeck, Daniel R.;  Hermes, J. J.;  Holdsworth, Daniel L.;  Li, Gang;  Li, Yaguang;  Mann, Andrew W.;  Reese, Daniel R.;  Sekaran, Sanjay;  Yu, Jie;  Antoci, Victoria;  Bergmann, Christoph;  Brown, Timothy M.;  Howard, Andrew W.;  Ireland, Michael J.;  Isaacson, Howard;  Jenkins, Jon M.;  Kjeldsen, Hans;  McCully, Curtis;  Rabus, Markus;  Rains, Adam D.;  Ricker, George R.;  Tinney, Christopher G.;  Vanderspek, Roland K.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:30/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Archaeologists have traditionally thought that the development of Maya civilization was gradual, assuming that small villages began to emerge during the Middle Preclassic period (1000-350 bc  dates are calibrated throughout) along with the use of ceramics and the adoption of sedentism(1). Recent finds of early ceremonial complexes are beginning to challenge this model. Here we describe an airborne lidar survey and excavations of the previously unknown site of Aguada Fenix (Tabasco, Mexico) with an artificial plateau, which measures 1,400 m in length and 10 to 15 m in height and has 9 causeways radiating out from it. We dated this construction to between 1000 and 800 bc using a Bayesian analysis of radiocarbon dates. To our knowledge, this is the oldest monumental construction ever found in the Maya area and the largest in the entire pre-Hispanic history of the region. Although the site exhibits some similarities to the earlier Olmec centre of San Lorenzo, the community of Aguada Fenix probably did not have marked social inequality comparable to that of San Lorenzo. Aguada Fenix and other ceremonial complexes of the same period suggest the importance of communal work in the initial development of Maya civilization.


Lidar survey of the Maya lowlands uncovers the monumental site of Aguada Fenix, which dates to around 1000-800 bc and points to the role of communal construction in the development of Maya civilization.


  
Study of Aerodynamic Grain Entrainment in Aeolian Transport 期刊论文
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2020, 47 (11)
作者:  Li, G.;  Zhang, J.;  Herrmann, H. J.;  Shao, Y.;  Huang, N.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:7/0  |  提交时间:2020/05/13
aerodynamic entrainment  wind tunnel  turbulence  surface shear stress  
Study of SO2 Pollution in the Middle East Using MERRA-2, CAMS Data Assimilation Products, and High-Resolution WRF-Chem Simulations 期刊论文
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2020, 125 (6)
作者:  Ukhov, A.;  Mostamandi, S.;  Krotkov, N.;  Flemming, J.;  da Silva, A.;  Li, C.;  Fioletov, V.;  McLinden, C.;  Anisimov, A.;  Alshehri, Y. M.;  Stenchikov, G.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:7/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/02
Formation of Toxic Unsaturated Multifunctional and Organosulfur Compounds From the Photosensitized Processing of Fluorene and DMSO at the Air-Water Interface 期刊论文
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2020, 125 (6)
作者:  Mekic, Majda;  Zeng, Jiafa;  Jiang, Bin;  Li, Xue;  Lazarou, Yannis G.;  Brigante, Marcello;  Herrmann, Hartmut;  Gligorovski, Sasho
收藏  |  浏览/下载:6/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/02
sea surface microlayer  Fluorene  DMSO  photosensitized chemistry  ultrahigh resolution mass spectrometry  organosulfur compounds  
Hydrogen peroxide sensor HPCA1 is an LRR receptor kinase in Arabidopsis 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 578 (7796) : 577-+
作者:  Bogomilov, M.;  Tsenov, R.;  Vankova-Kirilova, G.;  Song, Y. P.;  Tang, J. Y.;  Li, Z. H.;  Bertoni, R.;  Bonesini, M.;  Chignoli, F.;  Mazza, R.;  Palladino, V;  de Bari, A.;  Orestano, D.;  Tortora, L.;  Kuno, Y.;  Sakamoto, H.;  Sato, A.;  Ishimoto, S.;  Chung, M.;  Sung, C. K.;  Filthaut, F.;  Jokovic, D.;  Maletic, D.;  Savic, M.;  Jovancevic, N.;  Nikolov, J.;  Vretenar, M.;  Ramberger, S.;  Asfandiyarov, R.;  Blondel, A.;  Drielsma, F.;  Karadzhov, Y.;  Boyd, S.;  Greis, J. R.;  Lord, T.;  Pidcott, C.;  Taylor, I;  Charnley, G.;  Collomb, N.;  Dumbell, K.;  Gallagher, A.;  Grant, A.;  Griffiths, S.;  Hartnett, T.;  Martlew, B.;  Moss, A.;  Muir, A.;  Mullacrane, I;  Oates, A.;  Owens, P.;  Stokes, G.;  Warburton, P.;  White, C.;  Adams, D.;  Bayliss, V;  Boehm, J.;  Bradshaw, T. W.;  Brown, C.;  Courthold, M.;  Govans, J.;  Hills, M.;  Lagrange, J-B;  Macwaters, C.;  Nichols, A.;  Preece, R.;  Ricciardi, S.;  Rogers, C.;  Stanley, T.;  Tarrant, J.;  Tucker, M.;  Watson, S.;  Wilson, A.;  Bayes, R.;  Nugent, J. C.;  Soler, F. J. P.;  Chatzitheodoridis, G. T.;  Dick, A. J.;  Ronald, K.;  Whyte, C. G.;  Young, A. R.;  Gamet, R.;  Cooke, P.;  Blackmore, V. J.;  Colling, D.;  Dobbs, A.;  Dornan, P.;  Franchini, P.;  Hunt, C.;  Jurj, P. B.;  Kurup, A.;  Long, K.;  Martyniak, J.;  Middleton, S.;  Pasternak, J.;  Uchida, M. A.;  Cobb, J. H.;  Booth, C. N.;  Hodgson, P.;  Langlands, J.;  Overton, E.;  Pec, V;  Smith, P. J.;  Wilbur, S.;  Ellis, M.;  Gardener, R. B. S.;  Kyberd, P.;  Nebrensky, J. J.;  DeMello, A.;  Gourlay, S.;  Lambert, A.;  Li, D.;  Luo, T.;  Prestemon, S.;  Virostek, S.;  Palmer, M.;  Witte, H.;  Adey, D.;  Bross, A. D.;  Bowring, D.;  Liu, A.;  Neuffer, D.;  Popovic, M.;  Rubinov, P.;  Freemire, B.;  Hanlet, P.;  Kaplan, D. M.;  Mohayai, T. A.;  Rajaram, D.;  Snopok, P.;  Torun, Y.;  Cremaldi, L. M.;  Sanders, D. A.;  Summers, D. J.;  Coney, L. R.;  Hanson, G. G.;  Heidt, C.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:33/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is a major reactive oxygen species in unicellular and multicellular organisms, and is produced extracellularly in response to external stresses and internal cues(1-4). H2O2 enters cells through aquaporin membrane proteins and covalently modifies cytoplasmic proteins to regulate signalling and cellular processes. However, whether sensors for H2O2 also exist on the cell surface remains unknown. In plant cells, H2O2 triggers an influx of Ca2+ ions, which is thought to be involved in H2O2 sensing and signalling. Here, by using forward genetic screens based on Ca2+ imaging, we isolated hydrogen-peroxide-induced Ca(2+)increases (hpca) mutants in Arabidopsis, and identified HPCA1 as a leucine-rich-repeat receptor kinase belonging to a previously uncharacterized subfamily that features two extra pairs of cysteine residues in the extracellular domain. HPCA1 is localized to the plasma membrane and is activated by H2O2 via covalent modification of extracellular cysteine residues, which leads to autophosphorylation of HPCA1. HPCA1 mediates H2O2-induced activation of Ca2+ channels in guard cells and is required for stomatal closure. Our findings help to identify how the perception of extracellular H2O2 is integrated with responses to various external stresses and internal cues in plants, and have implications for the design of crops with enhanced fitness.


HPCA1, a member of a previously uncharacterized subfamily of leucine-rich-repeat receptor-like kinases, is the hydrogen-peroxide sensor at the plasma membrane in Arabidopsis.